Terror Squad
by Richard Sapir and Warren MurphyHis name was Remo, and he did not feel very special.

Radical Shriek

Bloody bombings in Britain! Vicious violence in Venezuela! One single
maniacal madman is behind the ever-spreading rash of global terrorism--and the governments
of the three major world powers are just itching to get their hands on him! But only the
top-secret U.S. agency CURE has the cure: Remo Williams, the Destroyer!

The mysterious radical ringleader might be the only mortal capable of
besting Master Chiun's human killing machine hand-to-hand. But to save the world from
chaos, Remo swears to take the assassin to the carpet before you can say "Hi
Jack!"

Review:Ignore
the crummy cover and pretend this is an early edition. This was my first Remo book! I
don't even know how I got it, it was just stuck on a shelf in my apartment. I was bored
one rainy Sunday afternoon and pulled it down. After I finished it I said, "Wow! What
a cool book. It says #10...I wonder if I can find the others?" On that day was born
an obsession.

As you may have guessed, I love this book. Of the
first ten, only Chinese Puzzle comes closer to capturing the spirit of the series than
this novel. Plus, Nuihc is back for revenge! I believe this novel was very important to
the series, it really started building the legends of Sinanju and turning the series from
a Bond-style series to one filled with magic and myths. If we hadn't had the battle in the
place of dead animals, would we have ever had Kali, Mars, or even Shiva?